Title: Development
1Development
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2What is Development?
- Earths countries can be classified according to
their level of development - Development is the process of improving the
material conditions of people through the
diffusion of knowledge and technology - The process of development is continuous
involving actions to improve the health and
prosperity of the people - More developed countries (MDC) also known as
developed or relatively developed lie further
along the development continuum than less
developed countries (LDC) also known as
developing (implies that further progress is
expected)
3Challenges
- For MDCs the challenge is to maintain a high
level of development at a global scale - For LDCs the challenge is to find connections in
the global economy by taking advantage of local
skills and resources
4Why Does Development Vary Among Countries?
- A countrys level of development can be
determined according to 3 indicators - Economic
- Social
- Demographic
- The UNs Human Development Index (HDI) recognizes
that a countrys level of development is a
function of all 3 indicators - GDP per capita
- Literacy rate and amount of education
- Life expectancy
- The highest HDI possible is 1.0
- Norway 0.963
- Niger 0.281
5HDI
6Economic Indicators of Development
- UN uses Gross Domestic Product per capita
- 4 other indicators are sometimes used
- Economic structure
- Worker productivity
- Access to raw materials
- Availability of consumer goods
- GDP p.c.
- Value of all final goods and services produced in
a country in a year divided by the total
population (i.e. the average) - MDC gt20,000 p.a.
- LDC 1,000 p.a.
- Average income does not show distribution, not
informal income - E.g. not everyone in the US is wealthy 1/8 is
classified as poor - However, the higher the GDP, the greater the
potential for a more comfortable life
7Economic Sectors
- Jobs fall into 3 sectors
- Primary jobs involving the extraction of raw
materials e.g. farming, mining, fishing,
forestry and hunting - Secondary includes processing raw materials and
manufacturing of products - Tertiary the provision of services e.g.
banking, retailing, education, government
8- First priority is to secure food
- A high of agricultural workers indicates people
involved in food production for themselves - A low of agricultural workers indicates that a
handful of farmers can produce all the food
needed - Freed from producing food, the majority of
workers can then contribute through the secondary
and tertiary sectors to produce wealth
9Productivity Raw Materials
- Productivity is greater in MDCs because of access
to machinery and energy sources - Productivity can be measured by the value added
(gross value of the product minus the cost of raw
materials and energy) - Development requires access to raw materials and
energy - UK, 1st developed country (C18th) had abundant
raw materials when they ran short, the imported
from colonies this sustained development in
Europe but retarded it in Africa and Asia - Rise fall in global prices for raw materials
affects development - Raw materials determine development potential
rather than actual development e.g. Japan,
Singapore, Switzerland (MDCs few natural
resources) DR Congo (LDC abundant resources,
unstable government)
10Consumer Goods
- MDC wealth pays for needs (essential for life)
and wants (luxury goods services) - 3 consumer goods (11 ratio in MDCs, 1100 in
LDCs) are good indicators of development - Telephones
- Motor vehicles
- TVs
- In LDCs these goods are not central to daily life
why? - Results in different cultural characteristics
11Social Indicators of Development
- MDCs use their wealth to fund social services
(schools, hospitals welfare programs) - Therefore people are better educated, healthier
and protected form hardships hence they can be
more productive - Countries with high levels of development have
greater quality and quantity of education
services - Schooling
- MDC (mean 10 years) LDC (mean 2 years)
- Literacy rates (ability to read and write)
- MDC (gt95) LDC (30)
- Health Welfare
- Ratios of people to doctors, hospitals nurses
(MDC low LDC high) - Many MDCs health care is a public service (low or
no cost) - Diet influences health (MDCs more proteins
calories - MDCs welfare for sick, elderly, orphaned, vets,
unemployed - Challenge of MDCs to maintain current levels of
social services
12Demographic Indicators of Development
- Life expectancy at birth (LEB)
- Others include
- Infant mortality rate (IMR)
- Natural increase rate (NIR)
- Crude Birth Rate (CBR)
Demographic Indicator LDC MDC
LEB Early 40s Mid 70s
IMR 10 1
NIR gt2 lt1
CBR gt40/1000 lt15/1000
13Where are MDCs LDCs?
14MDCs
- Anglo-America (0.94)
- Language religion patterns less diverse
- Wealthy, industrial, consumer, high tech, food
producing - Western Europe (0.92)
- More heterogeneous culturally
- industrial, former colonial power, wealthy,
service-centred, united (EU) - Eastern Europe (0.78)
- Former Communist bloc, declining HDI, neglected
modernization of industry, restructuring to
market economies - Japan (0.93)
- Imports raw materials, skilled labour force, RD
for new products manufacturing processes - South Pacific (0.93)
- Former British colonies exporters of food, low
populations in relation to resources
15LDCs
- Latin America (0.78)
- Culturally diverse urbanized, developed Atlantic
coast, past political instability, uneven income
distribution, landless peasants - East Asia (0.72)
- China - Centrally planned, agrarian, large
population, potential economic tiger, some
reforms - Southeast Asia (0.71)
- Large population, C20th political instability,
inhospitable environments, cash crop production,
corruption - Middle East (0.66)
- Desert, large petroleum reserves in some states,
tension between Islam development, low literacy
among women, cultural disputes, hotbed of
terrorism - South Asia (0.58)
- High population densities growth, Monsoon
climate, Green Revolution, low literacy amongst
women - Sub-Saharan Africa (0.47)
- Rich in resources, poorest region on Earth,
relatively low populations compared to size of
continent - In the past, resources used to fuel Europes
economies landlocked states trade difficulties,
low world prices for resources, political
instability, climatic restrictions on food
supply, high NIR, corruption, tribal culture
mentality
16Gender Inequality
- In every country, gender inequalities exist to a
greater or lesser extent - Gender-Related Development Index (GDI)
- Compares level of development of women with that
of both genders - Complete gender equality GDI1.0
- Average incomes of women are less than men
- Women have lower levels of literacy than men in
LDCs - LEB women higher than men (7 in MDCs 1 in LDCs)
- Gender Empowerment Measure (GEM)
- Compares the ability of women and men to
participate in economic and political decision
making - In MDCs and LDCs fewer women hold positions of
political economic power - Fewer women in professional and technical
positions
17Literacy Rates
18Obstacles to Development in LDCs
- The gap between LDCs and MDCs continues to widen
- 20 worlds population living in MDCs consumer
5/6 of worlds goods 14 of worlds population
in Africa consume 1 of worlds goods - 2 major obstacles to development
- Adopting policies that successfully promote
development - Finding funds to pay for development
- 2 models
- International trade model
- Self-sufficiency model
19Development Through Self-Sufficiency
- Balanced growth, spreading investment equally
among sectors regions - Through trade barriers (duties, quotas, red tape)
- Case Study India
- Trade barriers protected domestic industries
- However Indias production was also for the
domestic market only no generation of foreign
currency - Subsidies and govt run industries
- Inefficient and outdated industries
- Large bureaucracy prone to corruption black
market
20Development Through International Trade
- Use of absolute and comparative advantage to
generate wealth and foreign currency - Rostows Development Model
- Traditional society
- Agrarian society, religious and military
- Preconditions for take-off
- Elite group initiates innovative activities
investment in new technology infrastructure - The take-off
- Rapid growth in limited activities where
technology grows rapidly other sectors remain
traditional - The drive to maturity
- Modern technology diffuses to all sectors
specialization of workers - The age of mass consumption
- Production shifts from heavy industry to consumer
goods
21International Trade Model
- According to the model
- Each country is in 1 of the 5 stages
- LDCs (1,2,3) MDCs (4,5)
- LDCs will achieve development by moving up
through the stages - Country engaged in international trade benefits
from a wider marketplace - Must keep abreast of changes in the market
- Model based on the fact that
- certain countries (e.g. Japan) had joined W.
Europe Anglo-America surely others could too - many LDCs contain abundant raw materials
22Examples of ITM
- Petroleum-rich Persian Gulf States
- Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman, UAE
- Used to be LDCs until 1970s oil boom
- Petroleum revenues have financed large scale
development housing, airports, universities,
telecom networks - Diffusion of consumer goods has altered the
landscape e.g. cars, TV, imported foods - Sometimes conflicts with Islamic religious
principles sometimes adaptation occurs
23Persian Gulf States
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24Examples of ITM (cont.)
- The Four Asian Dragons
- S. Korea, Singapore, Taiwan Hong Kong
- Singapore HK have no natural resources
- Taiwan S. Korea limited resources
- Therefore they developed by concentrating on
- Producing a handful of goods including electronic
good and clothing - Lower labour costs enabling goods to be sold
cheaply
25Limitations of the ITM
- 3 problems hinder countries from developing
through the ITM approach - Uneven resource distribution e.g. Zambia has
abundant copper reserves declining copper
prices have hindered development - Market stagnation world market demand has slowed
down (MDCs have limited pop growth) - Increased dependence on MDCs LDCs production for
world markets may compromise production of
necessities for the domestic market - Nevertheless the ITM has been the preferred
alternative for LDCs - E.g. India has removed trade barriers
monopolies dismantled quality of goods has
improved attracted trans-national corporations
(TNC) GDP has increased dramatically
26World Trade Organization (WTO)
- To promote the ITM, countries dominating world
trade formed the WTO - Idea is to promote international trade
- By reducing or eliminating barriers to trade
- By enforcing WTO agreements protection of
intellectual property rights - Critique of WTO
- WTO is anti-democratic
- Protects large corporations
- Compromises sovereignty of states
27Financing Development
- LDCs lack money for development
- Funds come from MDCs
- Loans from banks and international organizations
- Direct investment from transnational corp.
- Loans
- IMF and World Bank loans to finance
infrastructure projects to attract business
investment and development. Problems - Project failure
- Inability of LDCs to repay loans
- TNC (HQ in MDCs branches in LDCs). Problems
- Profits return to MDCs
- Employment opportunities extended to fortunate
few - Negative impact on local culture
28Core-Periphery Model
29Core-Periphery Model (cont.)
- Core MDCs
- W. Europe, Anglo-America, Australia New Zealand
- Periphery LDCs
- outer rings around the core
- Africa, Asia, S. America, E. Europe
- Semi-periphery Newly Industrialized Countries
(NIC) - e.g. Taiwan, Mexico, Brazil, India, S. Korea
30The Role of NGOs IDAs in Development
- Non-governmental organizations (NGOs)
- Case Studies
- World Vision
- The Grameen Bank
- Social Entrepreneurs
- International Development Agencies (IDAs)
- Case Studies
- Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA)
- Norwegian Aid